Infection with HIV, and oftentimes coinfection with TB, complicates the care of severely malnourished children in sub-Saharan Africa. These superimposed infections challenge clinicians faced with a population of malnourished children for whose care evidence-based guidelines have not kept up. Even as the care of HIV-uninfected malnourished children has improved dramatically with the advent of community-based care and even as there are hopeful signs that the HIV epidemic may be stabilizing or ameliorating, significant gaps remain in the care of malnourished children with HIV. Here we summarize what is currently known, what remains unknown, and what remains challenging about how to treat severely malnourished children with HIV and TB.
The pGALS (paediatric Gait, Arms, Legs, Spine) Musculoskeletal (MSK) screen is validated in English-speaking school-aged children and has been shown to be useful in acute paediatric practice in the UK. The aim of this study is to evaluate the practicality and acceptability of pGALS in children in an acute hospital setting in Malawi. School-aged inpatients and children presenting to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Blantyre, Malawi, participated. Practicality (time taken, degree of completion) and patient/parent assessed acceptability (time take, discomfort) were assessed using a 'smiley face' visual analogue scale. Fifty-one children (median age 8 years) were assessed; 23 out of 51 (45%) in the emergency department and the remainder were inpatients. Most presentations were infection or trauma related (n = 35, 69%). Practicality of pGALS was good [median time to complete pGALS--4 min (range 1.8-7.4)] and completed in 48 out of 51 children (94%). Acceptability was high; 98% of parents considered the time taken to be acceptable, 84% of children deemed little/no additional discomfort. Abnormalities using pGALS were found in 21 out of 51 (41%), mostly in the lower limbs. The pGALS MSK screen was practical and acceptable in this acute setting. Abnormal findings were common.
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